Round Table (tournament)

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A Round Table was a festive event during the Middle Ages that involved jousting, feasting, and dancing in imitation of King Arthur's legendary court. Named for Arthur's famed Round Table, the festivals generally involved jousts with blunted weapons, and often celebrated weddings or victories. In some cases participants dressed in the costume of such well-known knights as Lancelot, Tristan, and Palamedes.

History

The earliest Round Table was recorded in 1223, when the Crusader lord of Beirut held one in Cyprus to celebrate the knighting of his eldest sons. Round Tables were popular in various European countries through the rest of the Middle Ages and were at times very elaborate.

Round Tables in England

The "Winchester Round Table"

Tudor
red rose that adorns the table's centre.

Edward III held a tournament and feast at Windsor in 1344 and built a huge round structure to house it. The details of its use are obscure. However, it is believed that he intended to found an order of knighthood named after the Round Table and modelled on the fellowship of King Arthur; in the event, in 1348, the order he established was named after the Garter.[2]

Round Tables elsewhere in Europe

Round Tables were an aristocratic activity throughout Europe from the 13th until the 15th centuries, being recorded in France from 1235 to 1332. In

Valencia and as late as 1291 in Catalonia. According to Roger Sherman Loomis
, "Popes and prelates thundered against these costly, dangerous, and sometimes licentious frivolities, and denied Christian burial to those who took part." Even the middle classes were caught up in this spectacle.

In 1281, a burgher of

King of Naples, even erected an Arthurian castle for his 1446 Round Table.[3]

In 1507 and 1508 James IV of Scotland held a tournament of the Wild Knight and the Black Lady at Edinburgh that was said to "counterfeit the round table of King Arthur".[4] In 1566, Mary, Queen of Scots gave a feast in Stirling Castle with 30 guests at an imagined replica of Arthur's table during the masque-themed celebrations of the baptism of the future James VI.[5][6]

References

  1. ^ Channel 4 – Time Team.
  2. ^ Julian Munby, Richard Barber and Richard Brown (2006). Edward III's Round Table at Windsor. Boydell Press. 978 1 84383 313 0. Note also the review of this book in the Times Literary Supplement by Michael Prestwich in an article entitled A different circle 29 June 2007 page 29.
  3. .
  4. ^ Louise Olga Fradenburg, City, Marriage, Tournament: Arts of Rule in Late Medieval Scotland (Wisconsin, 1991), pp. 233-4: Thomas Thomson, The History of Scotland, by John Lesley Bishop of Ross (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 78.
  5. ^ Stevenson, Joseph, ed., The History of Mary Stewart by Claude Nau (1883), pp. cxlviii-cl, from British Library Sloane MS. 3199 fol.264 and Ashmole MS. 840 fol.99.
  6. .